Friday, July 03, 2015

National Doctors' Day

“Next to creating a life, the finest thing a man can do is save one.”- Abraham Lincoln
If there’s one person we all have had to visit at least once in our lives, it has to be a doctor. A doctor is has the tremendous responsibility to serve his or her fellowmen.

The National Doctors’ day is celebrated on 1st July every year across India in honor of the legendary physician Dr. Bidhan Chandra Roy. The main purpose to celebrate this day is to ‘show the importance of doctors and physicians in our lives and how their treatments are used to cure us. The celebrations are indicative of the respect that they command in the lives of their patients and this obligate them to fulfill their responsibilities as well. Doctors have dedicated all their lives to innovation, sacrifice and high quality service which is worthy of our recognition and gratitude every day.

India is a country of 1.2 billion people who depend of the efficiency of physicians to large extent at all times. Out of these 1.2 billion people many are from the rural and isolated areas of the country. There are thousands of doctors stepping out of their comfort zones and committing to help people in these rural areas free of cost. They are definitely, true heroes of this country.

We are at the hands of doctors every single day; they take decisions that can completely alter the way we live. Therefore, we must be grateful to them and must acknowledge the great service they provide to mankind. For the page that wakes them up at 3 a.m.; for their sacrifices, personal and professional. If there is one thing we can do, it should be to just call our own doctors on this day and just thank them for everything they have done for us until now, make them feel appreciated and special.

For their expert advice and compassionate care. I dedicate this entire post to all the great doctors of this nation. I salute each and every individual who is currently a doctor or is in the process of becoming a doctor and taking up this huge challenge for society. These are the pearls of tomorrow, they will make this nation proud and they will shine bright.


Thank you.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

The Irony of Indian Education

“Irony is the gaiety of wisdom and the joy of reflection.”

In India however, irony seems to be the daily staple of our lives as we reflect on the happenings in the country.

The best defense to a false degree accusation.

From being a country where pissing on the road is fine, but kissing/any form of PDA isn't and where moms want their daughter to control their husbands and expect their sons to control their wives, the latest in a long list of ironies is that Smriti, Irani, the cabinet minister for Human Resource Development, responsible for education in the country herself has extremely murky education credentials.

In the ongoing furore that followed this revelation, one could not help but wonder, how education came to be such a controversial topic at times.

Even before the above mentioned incident occurred, a massive “fake degree scam” in Bangalore was unearthed where offers of degrees and certificates were openly advertised. The ads, posted on various websites, claimed to provide degree certificates from various varsities in no time to (un?)suspecting netizens. Another popular example of disrespect for our education system was the famous  IIPM or Indian Institute of Planning and Management issue, where a complaint by the University Grants Commission UGC, revealed that the institute is ‘cheating’ and ‘fooling’ its students as it is not recognised by any regulatory body.

Scams are more staple in our country than rice and wheat.

Even despite outright illegal acts, a  lot of activities in India’s education sector have been in a certain grey area; these include the system of “donations” to gain entry into universities, the setting up of universities and educational institutes without accreditation etc.


The main reason for a general sense of disrespect and heedlessness towards the education sector, is mainly that education is either viewed as a simple means to an end; students look at degrees from colleges as one way tickets to placement with an MNC and lifelong series of foreign trips and a priority savings account with Axis bank, or education is viewed as an inconvenience to be dealt with before entering the job sphere.

Education is neither of these two; it is meant to be an enlightening experience, to prepare you for the numerous challenges that you are inevitably to face in your later life.

Rural areas have particularly low literacy and education rates

A degree is meant to be nothing but a proof of these efforts, and a sign that you have the knowledge required to survive in the world, instead of being a “employable” stamp.

The moment that we as a country realize this, education and fake degree scams will cease to exist, and rural parents will start sending their children to schools 57.8 million children are out of primary school globally with India, ranking among the top five nations with 1.4 million children being out of school.

In the meantime, one can only hope that our other ministers make more educated claims henceforth.


- Anand Banerjee is a  creative intern with +Citizens Association For Child Rightsa non profit working in public schools on India to improve the standard of education and well being of children.
www.facebook.com/CitizensAssociationForChildRights
www.ngocacr.com

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